Author:
MacCarthy Thomas,Seymour Robert M,Pomiankowski Andrew
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Sex determination networks evolve rapidly and have been studied intensely across many species, particularly in insects, thus presenting good models to study the evolutionary plasticity of gene networks.
Results
We study the evolution of an unlinked gene capable of regulating an existing diploid sex determination system. Differential gene expression determines phenotypic sex and fitness, dramatically reducing the number of assumptions of previous models. It allows us to make a quantitative evaluation of the full range of evolutionary outcomes of the system and an assessment of the likely contribution of sexual conflict to change in sex determination systems. Our results show under what conditions network mutations causing differential regulation can lead to the reshaping of sex determination networks.
Conclusion
The analysis demonstrates the complex relationship between mutation and outcome: the same mutation can produce many different evolved populations, while the same evolved population can be produced by many different mutations. Existing network structure alters the constraints and frequency of evolutionary changes, which include the recruitment of new regulators, changes in heterogamety, protected polymorphisms, and transitions to a new locus that controls sex determination.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
11 articles.
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1. Antagonistic Coevolution Drives Whack-a-Mole Sensitivity in Gene Regulatory Networks;PLOS Computational Biology;2015-10-09
2. Patterns and Mechanisms of Evolutionary Transitions between Genetic Sex-Determining Systems;Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology;2014-07-03
3. Colour Plates;The Evolution of Sex Determination;2014-06-12
4. Glossary;The Evolution of Sex Determination;2014-06-12
5. Copyright Page;The Evolution of Sex Determination;2014-06-12